Structured silicon anode

ABSTRACT

A battery can be fabricated from a substrate including silicon. This allows the battery to be produced as an integrated unit. The battery includes a anode formed from an array of spaced elongated structures, such as pillars, which include silicon and which can be fabricated on the substrate. The battery also includes a cathode which can include lithium.

This application is a continuation of U.S. Ser. No. 12/074,642 which was filed on Mar. 4, 2008 and which is still pending and the disclosure of which is incorporated hereinto in its entirety by reference. That application was a division of U.S. Application Ser. No. 10/533,822 filed on Aug. 31, 2005 and which issued as U.S. Pat. No. 7,402,829 on Jul. 22, 2008. That application is, in turn, the entry into the national phase in the U.S. of International Application Serial No. PCT/GB2003/004783 which was filed on 5 Nov. 2003. The International Application claims priority from British Application No. GB 0225779.8 filed on 5 Nov. 2002.

The present invention relates to structured silicon anodes for lithium battery applications.

Silicon is recognised as a potentially high energy per unit volume host material for lithium in lithium battery applications¹. Attempts at realising this potential have met with only partial success when nano-composites of silicon powder and carbon black have been used². The major technical problem associated with the use of silicon/lithium appears to be the mechanical failure brought about by the repeated large volume expansion associated with alloying^(1c,3). Metallic and intermetallic anodic host materials, other than layer materials such as graphite, are reported to disintegrate after a few lithium insertion/extraction cycles^(3,4) unless in fine powder form (sub-micron range). Since we are interested in finding a way to make a lithium battery integrated onto a silicon chip we need to find a solution to this materials problem. It is envisaged that the principal applications area for lithium batteries integrated into a chip would be in the medical field. Thus the well-developed practice of cochlea implants appears to be an area that would benefit from an integrated battery supply⁵.

This invention seeks to realise the potential of the silicon-lithium system to allow the possibility of a lithium battery integrated on to a silicon chip.

Accordingly this invention provides a method of fabricating sub-micron silicon electrode structures on a silicon wafer. Preferably these structures comprise pillars.

For a silicon-lithium system the basic cell diagram can be represented as Li|Li⁺-electrolyte|Si, for this cell the cathodic process is, discharge of lithium onto silicon to form an alloy (charging), and the anodic process is lithium extraction or de-alloying (discharging). The EMF data reported by Wen and Huggins⁶ for the liquid system at 415° C. is shown bracketed below and the solid system at room temperature⁷ is shown un-bracketed below. Their results (in mV vs, Li) are: Si/Li₁₂Si₇-582(332); Li₁₂Si₇/Li₇Si₃-520(288); Li₇Si₃/Li₁₃Si₄-428 (158); Li₁₃Si₄/Li₂₁Si₅-˜300 (44).

It will be appreciated that the formation of Li₁₂Si₇ in place of Si results in a significant volume change (the alloy is 2.17 times bigger). On a conventional silicon wafer suitable for use as an anode for a lithium battery this volume change leads to crack formation and pulverisation however due to their small size and configuration sub-micron anode structures made in accordance with the invention, are be able to tolerate the conditions occasioned by the massive volume changes occasioned by lithium alloying/de-alloying. In tests structured electrodes of sub micron diameter Si pillars maintained their structural integrity throughout the cycling whereas planar Si electrodes showed cracks (2 micron features) after 50 cycles. An appropriate size restriction to achieve suitable electrodes is that the silicon pillars should not exceed a fractional surface coverage (F) of ˜0.5.

An embodiment of the invention will now be described by way of non-limiting example only, with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:

FIG. 1 is a schematic view of a structured electrode;

FIG. 2 shows one of a series of CV scan sets;

FIG. 3 shows results for a series of galvanostratic measurements;

FIG. 4 shows pictures of the structure;

FIG. 5 shows SEM pictures of the structure; and

FIG. 6 shows a lithium battery in accordance with the present invention.

The electrochemical discharge of lithium on silicon and its subsequent chemical reaction destroys the silicon lattice, giving rise to the swelling of the solid, producing amorphous Si/Li phases¹³. The first new phase to appear in the system is Li₁₂Si₇. This compound, and all the rest up to Li, is a so-called Zintl-Phase Compound (ZPC), and consists of simple, electropositive, cations and complex co-valently bound, multiply charged, electronegative, anions. Of course the charge ascribed to the “ions” is purely notional: the actual charge (depending upon definition) is less than the formal value and may be considerably less, hence the bulk lithium will be referred to as Li° and bulk silicon as Si_(n)°.

It is important to form some idea of the mechanism of lithiation and de-lithiation of silicon. It is proposed that:

(i) Discharged lithium reacts with silicon forming a ZPC film with atomically continuous contact to the silicon. (ii) Lithium excess diffuses (via a vacancy mechanism) through the compact ZPC film to react with silicon at the Si/ZPC interface, thickening the ZPC film, without void formation.

These processes might be represented by: Li⁺(el)+e⁻(solid)→Li(ads.); Li(ads.)+V(ZPC)→Li° (ZPC)_(s); Li° (ZPC)_(s)→diffusion→Li° (ZPC)_(ZPC/Si); x Li°+ySi°→ZPC (Li_(x/y)Si). (Li(ads) is Li adsorbed on ZPC; V is a Li° vacancy in ZPC)

(iii) The amorphous¹³ ZPC film is deformable and so does not give rise to significant stress induced cracking on volume change.

The diffusion coefficient, D, for Li in crystalline Si¹⁴ is ˜10 ⁻¹⁴ cm₂s⁻¹, Li in ZPC is expected to be faster; a value of D 10 ⁻¹² cm₂s⁻¹ would be enough to account for all the processes carried out in this study. This model for ZPC film formation is in many ways analogous to the model of SiO² layer formation on silicon due to Deal and Grove¹⁵: but the details are different and will be treated elsewhere.

The model for ZPC decomposition is, in broad terms, the reverse of the above steps. Discharge of Li° at the electrolyte interface produces a surface vacancy in the ZPC. Locally Li° moves into the vacancy so the vacancy diffuses back to the ZPC/Si interface: at the interface Si_(n) rejoins the Si phase (where it is said to be polycrystalline¹³) and vacancies coalesce to produce larger void spaces. These spaces, as they coalesce further and grow, give rise to the crack like features seen in the SEM pictures in FIGS. 4 c, d and 5. Such a process has been described by Beaulieu et al¹⁶ for lithium removal from silicon/tin alloys.

It has been shown that repeated Li alloying/de-alloying of planar Si can be carried out without pulverisation of the substrate, cf. FIG. 5. However, as noted, the alloy/de-alloy process is limited by diffusion through the ZPC layer. In order to obtain charging rates suitable for various applications it is necessary to increase the surface area of the Si/electrolyte interface; and this has been done using pillar fabrication. Previous attempts using silicon particles have failed because the particle-to-particle contacts change and part with cycling². The pillar structures, on the other hand, are largely maintained as evidenced by the flatness of the pillar tops after 50 cycles, cf. FIG. 4.

Efficiencies of <100% reported here are attributed mainly to reaction, on alloying, with the electrolyte, and to a lesser extent isolation of regions of ZPC. The data presented here show that reduced current density on both alloying and de-alloying results in improving efficiency. It is supposed that this improvement comes mainly from a reduced surface concentration of adsorbed Li on alloying and accessing all the lithium in the ZPC on de-alloying.

There is large scope for further increasing the surface-to-volume ratio of the pillar construction, for example, pillars of diameter (d) ˜0.3 microns and 6 micron height (H). The pillar volume (v) would be, FH, and for F=0.4, v=2.4×10⁻⁴ cc/cm², which is equivalent, when converted to Li₁₂Si₇, to a capacity of 3.81×10³ v=914 microAhrcm⁻². The surface area of such a pillar structure is ˜4 FH/d, which is the basis of the much improved characteristics.

To make structures in accordance with the invention the following method may be used, namely “Island Lithography” as disclosed in international patent No. WO01/13414. This method employs cesium chloride as the resist in the lithographic step in the fabrication of pillar arrays. It works as follows. A thin film of CsC1 is vacuum deposited on the clean, hydrophilic, surface of the Si substrate. This system is then exposed to the atmosphere at a controlled relative humidity. A multilayer of water adsorbs on the surface, the CsC1 is soluble in the water layer (being more soluble at places of higher radius of curvature). The CsC1 re-organises into a distribution of hemispherical islands, driven by the excess surface energy associated with CsC1 surface curvature. Such arrays are useful in making structures for various studies involving nano-scale phenomena. In this case reactive ion etching is preferably used, with the islands acting as X masks so that removal of the surrounding silicon forms the desired pillar structures.

A study of the kinetics of the formation of island arrays has been carried out on GaAs surfaces⁹ and more recently, and more extensively, on Si/SiO₂ surfaces¹⁰ where the technique and results are described in detail. The process variables are: CsC1 film thickness (L); humidity (RH), time of exposure (t). The resulting island array has a Gaussian distribution of diameters, average diameter (<d>) standard deviation (±s) and surface fractional coverage (F). Having made the CsC1 resist array the next step is reactive ion etching (RIE) to produce the corresponding array of pillars¹¹. The RIE process variables are: feed-gas composition, flow rate and chamber pressure; RF power; dc bias; etch time. The results are characterised by the etch depth, corresponding to pillar height (H), and the wall angle, namely the angle that the pillar wall makes with the wafer plane; it is chosen in this study to be close to 90°. The examples reported in this work were etched in a Oxford Plasmalab 80 apparatus. The etch gas was (O₂:Ar:CHF₃) in the ratio 1:10:20; feed rate 20 sccm; chamber pressure, 50 milli pascals; RF power, 73 watts; dc bias 200V.

The pillar structure reported in this study (K-series) was characterised as <d>=580 nm±15 nm; F=0.34; H=810 nm: it was made using, L=80 nm; RH=40%; t=17.5 hrs. After fabrication the silicon samples were washed in water; etched for 20 seconds in NH₄OH (28 w % NH₃); H₂O₂ (100 v/v): H₂O in equal volume ratios; the etchant was flooded away with de-ionized water and blow dried.

Of course the structures may also be fabricated by other known techniques, such as photolithography, which produce regular arrays of features rather than the scattered distribution produced by island lithography.

FIG. 1 is a schematic view of a structured electrode, in accordance with the invention and as used in the following tests, it shows a part sectional view of the anode in which the pillars 2 can clearly be seen on the silicon wafer 3.

FIG. 6 shows a lithium battery, comprising a typical embodiment of the present invention, and including an anode 1, a cathode 4, a polymer electrolyte 5, a first strip 6 representing a rectifier circuit connected to a coil encircling the anode for charging purposes, a second strip 7 representing the output circuit (driven by the battery), and a pair of wires 8 for connection to the device to be driven.

Electrochemical tests were performed in a three-electrode, glass, cell where the Si sample is the working electrode and metallic Li is used for both the counter and reference electrodes. A 1 M solution of LiC1O₄ (Merck Selectipurâ) in ethylene carbonate:diethyl carbonate (Merck Selectipurâ), (1:1) w/w solvent was used as the electrolyte. The cell was assembled under a dry argon atmosphere in a glove box. Ohmic contact was made to the rear side of the silicon samples electrodes using a 1:1 In—Ga eutectic alloy¹². The electrode area was delineated using an O-ring configuration in a PTFE holder. No adhesive is used and a good electrolyte/atmosphere seal is obtained. In an earlier study we found that epoxy adhesive, used to mount a Si electrode, contaminated the active electrode surface causing spurious currents at high voltages (>2V).

Electrochemical behavior of the cell was investigated by cyclic voltammetry (CV) and by galvanostatic measurement (voltage vs. time at constant current), using an electrochemical workstation (VMP PerkinElmer™ Instruments). The capacity referred to here is the total charge inserted into the projected electrode surface area exposed to the electrolyte (this ignores any surface area due to structuring), given as μAhcm⁻² (micro Amp hours cm⁻²).

The results obtained were:

The response of the Li|Li⁺-electrolyte|Si cell was measured: for this cell the cathodic process is, discharge of lithium onto silicon to form an alloy (charging), and the anodic process is lithium extraction or de-alloying (discharging). FIG. 2 shows one series of CV scan sets (details in caption). The first cycle, and to quite a large extent the second, differs from those that follow. It is conjectured that this difference is due to a “formation” effect, associated with the filming of the electrode during the first Li discharge. After the first and second cycles, the scans assume a repeatable general shape. Since these are scans in which the potential is changed slowly and the current densities are therefore small, there are no IR drop or diffusion overpotential terms, and assuming no activation overpotential, the electrode potential is a measure of the surface lithium activity. The first cathodic feature is the rapid increase in current at ^(˜)330 mV that, according to room temperature data⁷, corresponds to the presence of Li₁₂Si₇. The lowest potential reached is 25 mV and this is taken to be associated with the presence of higher Li compounds, e.g. Li₂₁Si₅. The cycling sequence shows a progressive “activation” of the sample, associated with increasing breakdown of the crystalline silicon structure (see discussion). The anodic, part of the CV curve is associated with progressive de-lithiation of the electrode according to the various ZPC equilibrium potentials. For a scan rate of 1 mVs⁻¹ the capacity (260 μAhcm⁻²) of the electrodes is roughly comparable to the pillar volume being converted to Li₁₂ Si₇, while for the slower scan rates the capacity exceeds that of the pillar volume. The latter results point to the participation of the substrate in the alloying/de-alloying process. FIG. 3 shows the results for a series of galvanostratic measurements on structured Si at two different charge/discharge current densities (details in caption).

FIG. 4 shows the structure of the K-series of silicon electrodes that were used in this study and the effects of extensive galvanostatic cycling upon that structure. The structure are clearly intact, but at the higher current density slight cracking of the bulk Si surface, below the pillars, is observed.

FIG. 5 shows the SEM pictures of the structures obtained on planar (un-pillared) Si electrodes before cycling and, separately, after galvanostatic cycling. When cycled at the lower current densities, the surface is deformed, though crack formation does not occur. Cycling at higher current densities produces wide cracks.

REFERENCES

-   1. (a): R. A. Sharma and R. N. Seefurth, J. Electrochem. Soc., 123,     1763 (1976); (b): B. A. Boukamp, G. C. Lash and R. A. Huggins, J.     Electrochem. Soc., 128, 725 (1981); (c): R. A. Huggins, Lithium     Alloy Anodes in “Handbook of Battery Materials”, J. O, Besenhard Ed,     Wiley-VCH, Weinheim, 359 (1999); (d): S. Bourderau, T. Brousse     and D. M. Schleich, J. Power Sources, 233, 81 (1999); (e): O. Z.     Zhuo, Bo Bao and S. Sinha, U.S. Pat. No. 6,334,939 B1 Jan. 1, 2002:     There are many other patents relating to the use of various host     materials for Li anodes. -   2. Hong Li, Xuejie Huang, Liquan Chen, Zhengang Wu and Yong Liang,     Electrochem. Solid-State Lett., 2, 547 (1999). -   3. J. O. Besenhard, J. Yang and M. Winter, J. Power Sources, 68, 87     (1997) -   4. L. Y. Beaulieu, D. Larcher, R. A. Dunlap and J. R. Dahn, J.     Electrochem. Soc., 147, 3206 (2000). -   5. J. K. Niparko (Editor), “Cochlea Implants”, Pub., Lippincott     Williams and Wilkins, Philadelphia, (2000) -   6. C. J. Wen and R. A. Huggins, J. Solid State Chem., 37, 271     (1981). -   7. W. J. Weydanz, M. Wohlfahrt-Mehrens and R. A. Huggins, J. Power     Sources 81-82, 237 (1999). -   8. J-P. Colinge, “Silicon-on-Insulator Technology: Materials to     VLSI”, Kluwer Acad. Pub, Boston, Chapter 2, (1991). -   9. Mino Green, M. Garcia-Parajo, F. Khaleque and R Murray, Appl.     Phys. Lett., 63, 264 (1993.) -   10. Mino Green and Shin Tsuchiya, J. Vac. Sci. & Tech. B, 17, 2074     (1999). -   11. Shin Tsuchiya, Mino Green and RRA Syms, Electrochem. Solid-State     Lett, 3, 44 (2000). -   12. L-C. Chen, M. Chen, T-H Tsaur, C Lien and C-C. Wan, Sensors and     Actuators, A49, 115 (1995). -   13. H. Li, X. Huang, L. Chen, G. Zhou, Z. Zhang, D. Yu, Y. J. Mo     and N. Pei, Solid State Ionics, 135, 181 (2000). -   14. “Properties of Silicon”, Pub. INSPEC, The Institution of     Electrical Engineers, London, (1988): p. 461 for solubility; p. 455     for diffusion data. -   15. B. E. Deal and A. S. Grove, J. Appl. Phys., 36, 3770 (1965). -   16. L. Y. Beaulieu, K. W. Eberman, R. L. Turner, L. J Krause     and J. R. Dahn, Electrochem. Solid-State Lett., 4, A137 (2001). 

1-8. (canceled)
 9. A method of fabricating an energy storage device comprising the steps of: forming an anode comprising an array of spaced elongated structures extending from a substrate, wherein the elongated structures comprise silicon; forming a cathode; and arranging the anode and cathode in communication to form a battery.
 10. A method of fabricating a device according to claim 9 in which the anode is arranged to tolerate the conditions occasioned by the volume changes caused by charging/discharging of the battery.
 11. A method according to claim 9 in which the anode is arranged to maintain structural integrity throughout a cycling of the battery.
 12. A method according to claim 11 wherein the elongated structures maintain structural integrity after 50 cycles of the battery.
 13. A method according to claim 9 in which the anode is arranged to withstand repeated volume expansion associated with alloying during use of the battery.
 14. A method according to claim 9 further comprising the step of arranging the elongated structures to not exceed a fractional coverage of 0.5 of the substrate.
 15. A method according to claim 9 wherein the step of forming the elongated structures comprises forming elongated structures which are 0.1 to 1.0 microns in diameter.
 16. A method according to claim 9 wherein the step of forming a cathode comprises forming a lithium-comprising cathode and further comprising providing an electrolyte comprising lithium for the battery.
 17. A method according to claim 9 wherein the array is one of a scattered distribution or a regular array.
 18. A method according to claim 9 wherein the elongated structures comprise pillars having a surface area of about 4 FH/d times the substrate area wherein F is the surface fractional coverage, H is the height of the pillar and d is the diameter of the pillar.
 19. A method of fabricating an energy storage device comprising the steps of: forming an anode comprising: providing a substrate comprising silicon, removing material from the substrate to form a plurality of spaced pillars on the substrate; forming a cathode; and arranging the anode and cathode in communication to form a battery.
 20. A method of fabricating a device according to claim 19 in which the anode is arranged to tolerate the conditions occasioned by the volume changes caused by charging/discharging of the battery.
 21. A method according to claim 19 in which the anode is arranged to maintain structural integrity throughout a cycling of the battery.
 22. A method according to claim 19 in which the anode is arranged to withstand repeated volume expansion associated with alloying during use of the battery.
 23. A method according to claim 19 further comprising the step of arranging the pillars to not exceed a fractional coverage of 0.5 of the substrate.
 24. A method according to claim 19 wherein the step of forming the pillars comprises forming pillars which are 0.1 to 1.0 microns in diameter.
 25. A method according to claim 19 wherein the step of forming a cathode comprises forming a lithium-comprising cathode.
 26. A method according to claim 25 further comprising providing an electrolyte comprising lithium for the battery.
 27. A method according to claim 25 further comprising providing an electrolyte comprising a lithium-based salt in a solvent for the battery.
 28. A method according to claim 19 further comprising providing a polymer electrolyte for the battery.
 29. A method according to claim 19 wherein the step of forming the pillars comprises forming pillars having a surface area of about 4 FH/d times the substrate area wherein F is the surface fractional coverage, H is the height of the pillar and d is the diameter of the pillar.
 30. A method of fabricating an energy storage device comprising the steps of: forming an anode comprising a plurality of spaced elongated structures each mounted at one end to a substrate and extending away therefrom, wherein the elongated structures comprise silicon; forming a cathode; and arranging the anode and cathode in communication to form a battery.
 31. A method of fabricating a device according to claim 30 in which the anode is arranged to tolerate the conditions occasioned by the volume changes caused by charging/discharging of the battery.
 32. A method according to claim 30 in which the anode is arranged to maintain structural integrity throughout a cycling of the battery.
 33. A method according to claim 30 wherein the elongated structures maintain structural integrity after 50 cycles of the battery.
 34. A method according to claim 30 in which the anode is arranged to withstand repeated volume expansion associated with alloying during use of the battery.
 35. A method according to claim 30 further comprising the step of arranging the elongated structures to not exceed a fractional coverage of 0.5 of the substrate.
 36. A method according to claim 30 wherein the step of forming the elongated structures comprises forming elongated structures which are 0.1 to 1.0 microns in diameter.
 37. A method according to claim 30 wherein the step of forming a cathode comprises forming a lithium-comprising cathode.
 38. A method according to claim 37 further comprising providing an electrolyte comprising lithium for the battery.
 39. A method according to claim 37 further comprising providing an electrolyte comprising a lithium-based salt in a solvent for the battery.
 40. A method according to claim 30 further comprising providing a polymer electrolyte for the battery.
 41. A method according to claim 30 wherein the elongated structures comprise pillars having a surface area of about 4 FH/d times the substrate area wherein F is the surface fractional coverage, H is the height of the pillar and d is the diameter of the pillar. 